The Ukiah Daily Journal

Lawmakers approve guaranteed income program

- By Jesse Bedayn

Universal basic income was championed by Martin Luther King Jr., promoted by Silicon Valley citizens as the “social vaccine for the 21st century” and endorsed by 2016 presidenti­al candidate Andrew Yang, but the notion of government-guaranteed payments to residents has never really caught on.

Now its time may have come. On Thursday, California lawmakers unanimousl­y approved the nation’s first state-funded guaranteed income program. Once the bill is signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom, cities and counties can apply for funding from a $35 million pool to support current or new pilots that prioritize pregnant mothers and young people who recently left the fos

ter care system. The White House has also rolled out a form of guaranteed income in its new expanded Child Tax Credit that is part of the pandemic relief package.

The state program comes on the heels of local efforts in the Bay Area and elsewhere. Over the last two years, Oakland, Marin County, San Francisco and Santa Clara County started one- to two-year basic income programs that offer a select group of participan­ts between $500 and $1,000 guaranteed dollars every month with no strings attached. Those programs are largely funded by private donations.

This new surge in support for guaranteed income is being credited to the wealth and racial inequaliti­es revealed by COVID-19, as job losses hit lowincome and minority workers the hardest.

The pandemic “took the blinders off of what it means to live on the margins,” said Los Angeles county supervisor Holly Mitchell, a member of Mayors for Guaranteed Income, a national group that has grown from 11 member cities to over 50 in the last year. “Everyone saw it.”

The Bay Area basic income initiative­s are focused on raising artists, mothers or minorities out of poverty. The Santa Clara County program, aimed at foster youth, helped lay the groundwork for the statewide program.

“Cities are the laboratori­es of democracy,” said Sukhi Samra, director of the mayors’ group, who hopes the pilots in the Bay Area and across California will “provide a proof of concept” for federal policies.

The new wave of basic income initiative­s is an alternativ­e to government­assistance programs that were “very prescripti­ve about doling out social services,” said state Sen. Dave Cortese, D-san Jose, referring to funds that could only be used in specific ways, such as food stamps.

Cortese, who started Santa Clara County’s income program for foster youth as a county supervisor, said those types of programs “really had a mentality of, ‘We know what’s best for you weaker, poorer people.’ ”

Critics of guaranteed income worry that free money, similar to unemployme­nt benefits, will discourage participan­ts from working. “There’s a pretty plausible case to be made that the more generous you make unemployme­nt benefits,” said Matt Zwolinski, director of the Center for Ethics, Economics and Public Policy at the University of San Diego, “the less anxious people are going to be to get back to work.”

Basic income supporters point to Stockton’s 2019 program, the first in the state, which found that full-time employment among participan­ts increased by 12% in the program’s first year. Participan­ts, who received $1,000 monthly from 2019 to 2021, reported greater financial stability month to month. That enabled them to buy the necessary food, pay off unexpected costs, and increase their overall wellbeing.

Zwolinski worries that the pilots’ one to two-year time frames limit the evidence researcher­s can pull from the data.

“The pilot programs are worth doing. They provide some level of evidence,” he said, but “there’s always going to be a leap of faith involved in jumping from a pilot program to, say, a full citywide program to a full statewide program.”

The City of Oakland’s new program is the largest in the Bay Area, offering $500 monthly to 600 families making below Oakland’s median household income, which is about $65,000 for a fourperson family. San Francisco is offering $1,000 a month for 130 artists and 150 Black and Pacific Islander pregnant women. Similarly, Marin County will be supporting 135 low-income women of color with $1,000 monthly. Santa Clara County’s pilot program provides $1,000 a month to 72 foster youth aging out of the system. The programs either randomly select eligible residents or pull from an applicant pool.

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